Originally posted by barber olly
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Longest LP side
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barber olly
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYep. That's the one I mentioned in message 4. The downside to this is the low dynamic level of the very long side 1. Side 2 does sound more impressive.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View Postgradus,
Looking back, it's interesting that the main reason given for the failure to market quad was that people did not want to fill their rooms with extra speakers, but nowadays we are happy to do so.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostOther examples of long sides are Beethoven 9 with the 3rd & 4th movements on side 2 (Solti & Klemperer) around 38 minutes each) and the same work under Munch with movements 1-3 on side 1 (also 38 min.).
A Klemperer/Vox recording of Beethoven's Missa Solemnis also had sides around the 38 minute mark.
Then there was a Furtwangler Ring cycle boasting up to 43 minutes per side.
A few 16 r.p.m. vinyl discs were issued. I wonder how long these lasted for?
At another extreme was Stokowski's Ives Symphony 4 on CBS, which has the widest groove spacing I ever saw. Almost looks like a 78!
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barber olly
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostSchmidt-Isserstedt's Beethoven 9 on Decca was also a long one, IIR. Very good. I still have it, though also a CD replacement.
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Originally posted by barber olly View PostThe original SXL used the annoying habit of the time of breaking part way through Movt3, a ploy also often used in Berlioz SF half way through Scenes du Champs and Bruckner 7 Movt2. CDs may have a down side, but thankfully no flip-side!
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barber olly
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostDoes anyone know which was the first single disc version of Beethoven's 9th? There were many with the split 3rd movement, and both the Schmidt-Isserstedt and Ansermet CD versions still have a mini-break at the point where the side changeover was. I don't know whether this is for reasons of nostalgia, or just the transfer engineer(s) not knowing the work well enough.
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My recording of Vaughan-Williams' Fantasia (with Peter Katin) and the Piano Concerto (Vronsky/Babin/Boult) on EMI Greensleeve clocks up at an amazing 40.05 minutes on one side (as it says proudly on the sleeve notes), with no real trouble with the sound.
That's the best I can muster, although I believe that Sir Thomas Beecham's 'Faust Symphony' had about the same sort of time limit per side.
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Post 23 Col. Danby. Yes, the Beecham 'Faust' is a 2 LP set, ASD 317-8. Side 1 is 'Faust', Side 2 is 'Gretchen', Side 3 is 'Mephistopheles' and the Final Chorus. Side 4 has Symphonic Poem 'Orpheus'.
My LP of the V.W. Two Piano Concerto is the earlier issue, ASD 2469, with Symphony 8 on the other side. No side timings, unfortunately.
I also have the Vox LP of Beethoven's 9th, conducted by Horenstein, STPL 510.000. This is an American issue and is "remastered for stereo" "Stereo, can also be played mono". No date, but it seems to have been made in mono, so probably before 1958, then processed in some mysterious way to make it (sort of) stereo. There is a tiny scratching on the run-out groove of side 2 which is very difficult to read, but might be Pete Helbbiel, or something similar. No idea who he might have been, but perhaps the engineer to made the tape-to-disc transfer; Mercury LPs have a similar set of scratchings, including a P for George Piros, who did the transferring for Mercury.
The Schmidt-Isserstedt recording of the ninth is on a single Decca disc (SXL 6233), but at the price of a side break halfway through the Adagio.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by barber olly View PostDon't really know but I would guess probably either Horenstein on Vox or Otterloo on Philips.
Otterloo's 9th was in April 1955, but on two LPs coupled with the 8th. It wasn't released on a single LP until the reissue of September 1958.Last edited by Guest; 25-08-11, 17:00.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostThe Schmidt-Isserstedt recording of the ninth is on a single Decca disc (SXL 6233), but at the price of a side break halfway through the Adagio.
The first 9th I had in my possession was Erich Kleiber's on 4 sides, rather like the first pressing of Solti's. 3 sides was fair enough, but 4 was overdoing it a little.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View Postthe Beecham 'Faust' is a 2 LP set, ASD 317-8. Side 1 is 'Faust', Side 2 is 'Gretchen', Side 3 is 'Mephistopheles' and the Final Chorus. Side 4 has Symphonic Poem 'Orpheus'.
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Norfolk Born
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